Nilotic peoples
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Nile Valley, African Great Lakes, southwestern Ethiopia | |
Languages | |
Nilotic languages | |
Religion | |
Traditional faiths (Dinka religion, Kalenjin folklore etc), Christianity, Islam |
The Nilotic peoples are people indigenous to the Nile Valley who speak Nilotic languages. They inhabit South Sudan, Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, the northern border area of Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Burundi and Tanzania.[1] Among these are the Burun-speaking peoples, Teso people also known as Iteso or people of Teso,[2] Karo peoples, Luo peoples, Ateker peoples, Kalenjin peoples, Karamojong people also known as the Karamojong or Karimojong,[3] Datooga, Dinka, Nuer, Atwot, Lotuko, and the Maa-speaking peoples.
The Nilotes constitute the majority of the population in South Sudan, an area that is believed to be their original point of dispersal. After the Bantu peoples, they constitute the second-most numerous group of peoples inhabiting the African Great Lakes region around the East African Rift.[4] They make up a notable part of the population of southwestern Ethiopia as well. Nilotic peoples numbered 7 million in the late 20th century.[5]
The Nilotic peoples primarily adhere to Christianity and traditional faiths, including the Dinka religion. Some Nilotic peoples also adhere to Islam.
Name
[edit]The terms "Nilotic" and "Nilote"' were previously used as racial subclassifications, based on anthropological observations of the supposed distinct body morphology of many Nilotic speakers. Twentieth-century social scientists have largely discarded such efforts to classify peoples according to physical characteristics, in favor of using linguistic studies to distinguish among peoples. They formed ethnicities and cultures based on a shared language.[6] Since the late 20th century, however, social and physical scientists are making use of data from population genetics.[7][verification needed]
Nilotic and Nilote are now mainly used to refer to the various disparate people who speak languages in the same Nilotic language family. Etymologically, the terms Nilotic and Nilote (singular nilot) derive from the Nile Valley; specifically, the Upper Nile and its tributaries, where most Sudanese Nilo-Saharan-speaking people live.[8]
Ethnic and linguistic divisions
[edit]Languages
[edit]Linguistically, Nilotic people are divided into three subgroups:
- Eastern Nilotic – Spoken by Nilotic populations in southwestern Ethiopia, eastern South Sudan, northeastern Uganda, western Kenya, and northern Tanzania, it includes languages such as Turkana and Maasai.
- Southern Nilotic – Spoken by Nilotic populations in western Kenya, northern Tanzania, and eastern Uganda, it includes Kalenjin and Datog.
- Western Nilotic – Spoken by Nilotic populations in South Sudan, Sudan, northeastern Congo (DRC), northern Uganda, southwestern Kenya, northern Tanzania, and southwestern Ethiopia, it includes the Dinka-Nuer languages, Luo languages, and the Burun languages.
- Dinka–Nuer-Atwot
- Luo languages
- Burun languages
Ethnic groups
[edit]Nilotic people constitute the bulk of the population of South Sudan. The largest of the Sudanese Nilotic peoples are the Dinka, who have as many as 25 ethnic subdivisions. The next-largest groups are the Nuer, followed by the Shilluk.[9]
Nilotic people in Uganda includes the Luo peoples (Acholi, Alur, Adhola), the Ateker peoples (Iteso, Kumam, Karamojong, Lango people who despite speaking a mixture of Luo words, have Atekere origins, Sebei, and Kakwa).
In East Africa, the Nilotes are often subdivided into three general groups:
- The Plain Nilotes speak Maa languages and include the Maasai, Samburu, and Turkana peoples[4]
- The River Lake Nilotes include the Joluo (Kenyan Luo), who are part of the larger Luo group[4]
- The Highland Nilotes are subdivided into two groups, the Kalenjin and the Datog.
History
[edit]Origins
[edit]
A proto-Nilotic unity, separate from an earlier undifferentiated Eastern Sudanic unity, is assumed to have emerged by the third millennium BC. The development of the proto-Nilotes as a group may have been connected with their domestication of livestock. The Eastern Sudanic unity must have been considerably earlier still, perhaps around the fifth millennium BC. The proposed Nilo-Saharan unity would date to the Upper Paleolithic about 15 thousand years ago. The original locus of the early Nilotic speakers was presumably east of the Nile in what is now South Sudan. The Proto-Nilotes of the third millennium BC were pastoralists, while their neighbors, the proto-Central Sudanic peoples, were mostly agriculturalists.[11]
Nilotic people practised a mixed economy of cattle pastoralism, fishing, and seed cultivation.[12] Some of the earliest archaeological findings on record, that describe a similar culture to this from the same region, are found at Kadero, 48 m north of Khartoum in Sudan and date to 3000 BC. Kadero contains the remains of a cattle pastoralist culture and a cemetery with skeletal remains featuring sub-Saharan African phenotypes. It also contains evidence of other animal domestication, artistry, long-distance trade, seed cultivation, and fish consumption.[13][14][15][16]
Genetic and linguistic studies have demonstrated that Nubian people in Northern Sudan and Southern Egypt are an admixed group that started off as a population closely related to Nilotic people.[17][18] This population later received significant gene flow from Middle Eastern and other East African populations.[17] Nubians are considered to be descendants of the early inhabitants of the Nile valley who later formed the Kingdom of Kush, which included Kerma and Meroe and the medieval Christian kingdoms of Makuria, Nobatia, and Alodia.[19] These studies suggest that populations closely related to Nilotic people long inhabited the Nile Valley as far as southern Egypt in antiquity.
Early expansion
[edit]Language evidence indicates an initial southward expansion out of the Nilotic nursery into far southern Sudan beginning in the second millennium BC, the Southern Nilotic communities that participated in this expansion eventually reached western Kenya between 1000 and 500 BC.[20] Their arrival occurred shortly before the introduction of iron to East Africa.[21]
Expansion out of the Lower Wadi Howar
[edit]Linguistic studies indicate that the ancestors of the Nilotic peoples resided further north than their present locations. Archaeological evidence from sites in the Lower Wadi Howar reveals the presence of groups that are likely ancestral to both modern Nilotic speakers and Eastern Sudanic speakers as a whole.[22][23] Scholars argue that these ancestors inhabited the Lower Wadi Howar region.[23]
The archaeological findings in the Lower Wadi Howar reveal significant evidence of cultural continuity and interaction with ancient Nubian cultures, particularly through the association with the herringbone culture.[22][23] As aridity increased during the fourth millennium BCE, the importance of cattle in the economic and social life of the region grew, leading to the emergence of distinct cultural practices, including the adoption of pottery styles characterized by incised herringbone patterns. These patterns indicate strong contact with the A-Group and pre-Kerma cultures along the Nubian Nile Valley.[24] This interaction suggests that communities in the Lower Wadi Howar were actively engaged in trade networks, exchanging livestock and resources with these established cultures, thus integrating into the broader economic and cultural landscape of ancient Nubia. The evidence of cattle burials and the presence of pottery designs reflect a synthesis of local traditions and influences from neighboring cultures, highlighting the dynamic relationships that existed during this period of transformation and trade.
The Nilotic expansion from Central regions of the Sudan like the Gezira into the rest of South Sudan seems to have begun between the 5th-11th centuries. Some of these kater migratiobs coincided with the collapse of the Christian Nubian kingdoms of Makuria and Alodia and the penetration of Arab traders into central Sudan. From the Arabs, the South Sudanese may have obtained new breeds of humpless cattle.[25] Archaeologist Roland Oliver notes that the period also shows an Iron Age beginning among the Nilotic. These factors may explain how the Nilotic speakers expanded to dominate the region.
Shilluk
[edit]By the 16th century, the most powerful group among the Nilotic speakers were the Cøllø, called Shilluk by Arabs and Europeans, who spread east to the banks of the white Nile under the legendary leadership of Nyikang,[26] who is said to have ruled Läg Cøllø c from around 1490 to 1517.[27] The Cøllø gained control of the west bank of the river as far north as Kosti in Sudan. There they established an economy based on cattle raising, cereal farming, and fishing, with small villages located along the length of the river.[28] The Cøllø developed an intensive system of agriculture. The Cøllø lands in the 17th century had a population density similar to that of the Egyptian Nile lands.[29]
One theory is that pressure from the Cøllø drove the Funj people north, who would establish the Sultanate of Sennar. The Dinka remained in the Sudd area, maintaining their transhumance economy.[30]
While the Dinka were protected and isolated from their neighbours, the Cøllø were more involved in international affairs. The Cøllø controlled the west bank of the White Nile, but the other side was controlled by the Funj sultanate, with regular conflict between the two. The Cøllø had the ability to quickly raid outside areas by war canoe, and had control of the waters of the Nile. The Funj had a standing army of armoured cavalry, and this force allowed them to dominate the plains of the sahel.
Cøllø traditions tell of Rädh Odak Ocollo who ruled around 1630 and led them in a three-decade war with Sennar over control of the White Nile trade routes. The Cøllø allied with the Sultanate of Darfur and the Kingdom of Takali against the Funj, but the capitulation of Takali ended the war in the Funj's favour. In the later 17th century, the Cøllø and Funj allied against the Dinka, who rose to power in the border area between the Funj and Cøllø.[31]
The Cøllø political structure gradually centralized under the a king or reth. The most important is Rädh Tugø (son of Rädh Dhøköödhø) who ruled from circa 1690 to 1710 and established the Cøllø capital of Fashoda. The same period had the gradual collapse of the Funj sultanate, leaving the Cøllø in complete control of the White Nile and its trade routes. The Cøllø military power was based on control of the river.[31]
Southern Nilotic settlement in East Africa
[edit]Starting in the mid-19th century, European anthropologists and later Kenyan historians have been interested in the origins of human migration from various parts of Africa into East Africa. One of the more notable broad-based theories emanating from these studies includes the Bantu expansion. The main tools of study have been linguistics, archaeology and oral traditions.
Oral traditions
[edit]The significance of tracing individual clan histories in order to get an idea of Kalenjin groups formation has been shown by scholars such as B.E. Kipkorir (1978). He argued that the Tugen first settled in small clan groups, fleeing from war, famine, and disease, and that they arrived from western, eastern, and northern sections. Even a section among the Tugen claims to have come from Mount Kenya.[32]
The Nandi account on the settlement of Nandi displays a similar manner of occupation of the Nandi territory. The Kalenjin clans who moved into and occupied the Nandi area, thus becoming the Nandi tribe, came from a wide array of Kalenjin-speaking areas.[33]
Apparently, spatial core areas existed to which people moved and concentrated over the centuries, and in the process evolved into the individual Kalenjin communities known today by adopting migrants and assimilating original inhabitants.[34]
For various reasons, slow and multigenerational migrations of Nilotic Luo peoples occurred from South Sudan into Uganda and western Kenya from at least 1000 AD, and continuing until the early 20th century.[35] Oral history and genealogical evidence have been used to estimate timelines of Luo expansion into and within Kenya and Tanzania. Four major waves of migrations into the former Nyanza province in Kenya are discernible starting with the people of Jok (Joka Jok), which is estimated to have begun around 1490–1517.[36]
Joka Jok were the first and largest wave of migrants into northern Nyanza. These migrants settled at a place called Ramogi Hill, then expanded around northern Nyanza. The people of Owiny' (Jok'Owiny) and the people of Omolo (Jok'Omolo) followed soon after (1598-1625).[37]
A miscellaneous group composed of the Suba, Sakwa, Asembo, Uyoma, and Kano then followed. The Suba originally were Bantu-speaking people who assimilated into Luo culture. They fled from the Buganda Kingdom in Uganda after the civil strife that followed the murder of the 24th Kabaka of Buganda in the mid-18th century and settled in South Nyanza, especially at Rusinga and Mfangano islands.[38] Luo speakers crossed Winam Gulf of Lake Victoria from northern Nyanza into South Nyanza starting in the early 17th century.[37]
Post-colonial traditions
[edit]Several historical narratives from the various Kalenjin subtribes point to Tulwetab/Tulwop Kony (Mount Elgon) as their original point of settlement in Kenya.[39] This point of origin appears as a central theme in most narratives recorded after the colonial period. One of the more famous accounts states:
... The Kalenjin originated from a country in the north known as Emet ab Burgei, which means, the warm country. The people are said to have traveled southwards passing through Mount Elgon or Tulwet ab Kony in Kalenjin. The Sabaot settled around the slopes of the mountain while the others travelled on in search of better land. The Keiyo and Marakwet settled in Kerio Valley and Cherangani Hills. The Pokot settled on the northern side of Mount Elgon and later spread to areas north of Lake Baringo. At Lake Baringo, the Tugen separated from the Nandi and the Kipsigis. This was during a famine known as Kemeutab Reresik, which means, famine of the bats. It is said that during this famine a bat brought blades of green grass which was taken as a sign of good omen signifying that famine could be averted through movement to greener pastures. The Tugen moved and settled around Tugen Hills while the Kipsigis and the Lembus Nandi moved to Rongai area. The Kipsigis and Nandi are said to have lived as a united group for a long time but eventually were forced to separate due to antagonistic environmental factors. Some of these were droughts and invasion of the Maasai from Uasin Gishu.[40]
Geographical barriers protected the southerners from Islam's advance, enabling them to retain their social and cultural heritage and their political and religious institutions. The Dinka people were especially secure in the Sudd marshlands, which protected them from outside interference, and allowed them to remain secure without a large armed forces. The Shilluk, Azande, and Bari people had more regular conflicts with neighbouring states[41]
Culture and religion
[edit]Most Nilotes continue to practice pastoralism, migrating on a seasonal basis with their herds of livestock.[4] Some tribes are also known for a tradition of cattle raiding.[42]
Through lengthy interaction with neighbouring peoples, the Nilotes in East Africa have adopted many customs and practices from Southern Cushitic groups. The latter include the age set system of social organization, circumcision, and vocabulary terms.[4][43]
In terms of religious beliefs, Nilotes primarily adhere to traditional faiths, Christianity and Islam. The Dinka religion has a pantheon of deities. The Supreme, Creator God is Nhialic, who is the God of the sky and rain, and the ruler of all the spirits.[44] He is believed to be present in all of creation, and to control the destiny of every human, plant, and animal on Earth. Nhialic is also known as Jaak, Juong, or Dyokin by other Nilotic groups, such as the Nuer and Shilluk. Dengdit or Deng, is the sky God of rain and fertility, empowered by Nhialic.[45]
Deng's mother is Abuk, the patron goddess of gardening and all women, represented by a snake.[46] Garang, another deity, is believed or assumed by some Dinka to be a god suppressed by Deng. His spirits can cause most Dinka women, and some men, to scream. The term Jok refers to a group of ancestral spirits.
In the Lotuko mythology, the chief God is called Ajok. He is generally seen as kind and benevolent, but can be angered. He once reportedly answered a woman's prayer for the resurrection of her son. Her husband, however, was angry and killed the child. According to the Lotuko religion, Ajok was annoyed by the man's actions and swore never to resurrect any Lotuko again. As a result, death was said to have become permanent.
Genetics
[edit]Y DNA
[edit]A Y-chromosome study by Wood et al. (2005) tested various populations in Africa for paternal lineages, including 26 Maasai and 9 Luo from Kenya, and 9 Alur from the Democratic Republic of Congo. The signature Nilotic paternal marker Haplogroup A3b2 was observed in 27% of the Maasai, 22% of the Alur, and 11% of the Luo.[47]
Haplogroup B is another characteristically Nilotic paternal marker.[48] It was found in 22% of Luo samples, 8% of Maasai, and 50% of Nuer peoples.[47] The E1b1b haplogroup has been observed at overall frequencies around 11% among Nilo-Saharan-speaking groups in the Great Lakes area,[49] with this influence concentrated among the Maasai (50%).[47] This is indicative of substantial historic gene flow from Cushitic-speaking males into these Nilo-Saharan-speaking populations.[49] 67% of the Alur samples possessed the E2 haplogroup.[47]
The Y-DNA of populations in the Sudan region were studied, with various local Nilotic groups included for comparison. The signature Nilotic A and B clades were the most common paternal lineages amongst the Nilo-Saharan speakers, except those inhabiting western Sudan. There, a prominent North African influence was noted.[50]
Haplogroup A was observed amongst 62% of Dinka, 53.3% of Shilluk, 46.4% of Nuba, 33.3% of Nuer, 31.3% of Fur, and 18.8% of Masalit. Haplogroup B was found in 50% of Nuer, 26.7% of Shilluk, 23% of Dinka, 14.3% of Nuba, 3.1% of Fur, and 3.1% of Masalit. The E1b1b clade was also observed in 71.9% of the Masalit, 59.4% of the Fur, 39.3% of the Nuba, 20% of the Shilluk, 16.7% of the Nuer, and 15% of the Dinka.[50]
The atypically high frequencies of the haplogroup in the Masalit was attributed to either a recent population bottleneck, which likely altered the community's original haplogroup diversity, or to geographical proximity to E1b1b's place of origin in North Africa. The clade "might have been brought to Sudan [...] after the progressive desertification of the Sahara around 6,000–8,000 years ago".[50] Similarly, Afro-Asiatic influence was seen in the Nilotic Datog of northern Tanzania, 43% of whom carried the M293 subclade of E1b1b.[51]
mtDNA
[edit]Unlike the paternal DNA of Nilotes, the maternal lineages of Nilotes in general show low-to-negligible amounts of Afro-Asiatic and other extraneous influences. An mtDNA study examined the maternal ancestry of various Nilotic populations in Kenya, with Turkana, Samburu, Maasai, and Luo individuals sampled. The mtDNA of almost all of the tested Nilotes belonged to various sub-Saharan macro-haplogroup L subclades, including L0, L2, L3, L4, and L5. Low levels of maternal gene flow from North Africa and the Horn of Africa were observed in a few groups, mainly by the presence of mtDNA haplogroup M and haplogroup I lineages in about 12.5% of the Maasai and 7% of the Samburu samples, respectively.[52]
Autosomal DNA
[edit]The autosomal DNA of Nilotic peoples has been examined in a study on the genetic clusters of various populations in Africa. According to the researchers, Nilotes generally form their own African genetic cluster, although relatively most closely related to other Nilo-Saharan populations, more distantly followed by Afro-Asiatic speakers and Niger-Congo speakers. The authors also found that certain Nilotic populations in the eastern Great Lakes region, such as the Maasai, showed some additional Afro-Asiatic affinities due to repeated assimilation of Cushitic-speaking peoples over the past 5000 or so years.[53]
Overall, Nilotic people and other Nilo-Saharan groups are closely related to Afro-Asiatic speakers of North and East Africa. Both groups are inferred to have diverged from a common ancestor around 16,000 years ago. Nilotic people and other Nilo-Saharan groups are also closely related to Niger-Congo speakers of West and Central Africa. Both groups are inferred to have diverged from a common ancestor around 28,000 years ago, perhaps somewhere in the Sahel.[54] Most Nilotic peoples have predominant to exclusive West/East African ancestry, although some groups display varying degrees of West-Eurasian admixture, mostly mediated indirectly through pastoralists from the Horn of Africa.[55]
Admixture analysis
[edit]In 121 African populations, four African American populations, and 60 non-African populations, results indicated a high degree of mixed ancestry reflecting migration events. In East Africa, all population groups examined had elements of Nilotic, Cushitic and Bantu ancestry amongst others to varying degrees. By and large, genetic clusters were consistent with linguistic classification with notable exceptions including the Luo of Kenya. Despite being Nilo-Saharan speakers, the Luo cluster with the Niger-Kordofanian-speaking populations that surround them. This indicates a high degree of admixture occurred during the southward migration of southern Luo. Kalenjin groups and Maasai groups were found to have less Bantu ancestry, but significant Cushitic ancestry.[7]
Physiology
[edit]Physically, Nilotes are noted for their typically very dark skin color and slender, and occasionally tall bodies. They often possess exceptionally long limbs, particularly their distal segments (fore arms, lower legs). This characteristic is thought to be a climatic adaptation to allow their bodies to shed heat more efficiently.[citation needed][56][57][58][59]
Sudanese Nilotes are regarded as one of the tallest peoples in the world. Average values of 182.6 cm (5 ft 11.9 in) for height and 58.8 kg (130 lb; 9 st 4 lb) for weight were seen in a sample of Sudanese Shilluk.[60] Another sample of Sudanese Dinka had a stature/weight ratio of 181.9 cm (5 ft 11.6 in) and 58.0 kg (127.9 lb; 9 st 1.9 lb), with an extremely ectomorphic somatotype of 1.6–3.5–6.2.
In terms of facial features, the nasal profile most common amongst Nilotic populations is broad, with characteristically high index values ranging from 86.9 to 92.0. Lower nasal indices are often found amongst Nilotes who inhabit the more southerly Great Lakes region, such as the Maasai, which is attributed to genetic differences.[61]
Additionally, the Nilotic groups presently inhabiting the African Great Lakes region are sometimes smaller in stature than those residing in the Sudan region. Measurements of 172.0 cm (5 ft 7.7 in) and 53.6 kg (118 lb; 8 st 6 lb) were found in a sample of agricultural Turkana in northern Kenya, and of 174.9 cm (5 ft 8.9 in) and 53.0 kg (116.8 lb; 8 st 4.8 lb) in pastoral Turkana.[62] A height of 172.7 cm (5 ft 8.0 in) was seen for Maasai in southern Kenya, with an extreme trunk/leg length ratio of 47.7.[61]
Many Nilotic groups excel in long- and middle-distance running. This sporting prowess may be related to their exceptional running economy, a function of slim body morphology and very long, slender legs (particularly lower legs, i.e., calf muscles and ankles.).[63] For 404 elite Kenyan distance runners, 76% of the international-class respondents identified as part of the Kalenjin ethnic group and 79% spoke a Nilotic language.[64]
Notes
[edit]- ^ AHD: Nilotic 2020.
- ^ "Teso people". britannica.com. 18 February 2024.
- ^ "Karamojong people". britannica.com. 15 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f Okoth & Ndaloh 2006, pp. 60–62.
- ^ "Nilot | History, Culture & Language | Britannica". 12 October 2024.
- ^ Kidd 2006.
- ^ a b Tishkoff et al. 2009, pp. 1035–44.
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica:Nilot.
- ^ Metz 1991.
- ^ Oboler 1985, p. 17.
- ^ Clark 1984, p. 31.
- ^ Ogot 1967, pp. 40–42.
- ^ Krzyzaniak 1976, p. 762.
- ^ Marshall & Hildebrand 2002, pp. 99–143.
- ^ Gautier 2006.
- ^ Krzyzaniak 1978, pp. 159–172.
- ^ a b Hollfelder et al. 2017, pp. e1006976.
- ^ Rilly 2016.
- ^ Cooper 2017.
- ^ Ehret 1998, p. 7.
- ^ Clark & Brandt 1984, p. 234.
- ^ a b Becker, E. (2011). The prehistoric inhabitants of the Wadi Howar. Germany: Verlag nicht ermittelbar.
- ^ a b c Dimmendaal, G. J. (2007). Eastern Sudanic and the Wadi Howar and Wadi El Milk diaspora. University of Cologne.
- ^ Author. (2013). 'I Hope Your Cattle are Well': Archaeological Evidence for Early Cattle-centred Behaviour in the Eastern Sahara of Sudan and Chad. In M. Bollig, M. Schnegg, & H.-P. Wotzka (Eds.), Pastoralism in Africa - Past, Present and Future (pp. 66–103). Berghahn Books.
- ^ Robertshaw 1987, pp. 177–189.
- ^ Forde & James 1999.
- ^ Mercer 1971, p. 410.
- ^ EOPAME: Shilluk 2009.
- ^ Singh 2002, p. 659.
- ^ EOPAME: Dinka 2009.
- ^ a b Gen Hist Africa: vol. V chap 7 1999, pp. 89–103.
- ^ De Vries 2007, p. 47.
- ^ Huntingford 1953.
- ^ De Vries 2007, p. 48.
- ^ Ogot 1967, pp. 41–43.
- ^ Ogot 1967, p. 144.
- ^ a b Ogot 1967, pp. 144–154.
- ^ Ogot 1967, p. 212.
- ^ Kipkorir & Welbourn 1973, p. 64.
- ^ Chesaina 1991, p. 29.
- ^ Gillies n.d.
- ^ BBC: cattle vendetta 2012.
- ^ Collins 2006, pp. 9–10.
- ^ Lienhardt 1988, p. 29.
- ^ Lienhardt 1988, p. 104.
- ^ Lienhardt 1988, p. 90.
- ^ a b c d Wood et al. 2005, pp. 867–876.
- ^ Gomes et al. 2010, pp. 603–13.
- ^ a b Cruciani et al. 2004, pp. 1014–1022.
- ^ a b c Hassan et al. 2008, pp. 316–323.
- ^ Henn et al. 2008, pp. 10693–10698.
- ^ Castrì et al. 2008, pp. 189–92.
- ^ Tishkoff et al. 2009, pp. 1035–1044.
- ^ Fan, S.; Kelly, D. E.; Beltrame, M. H.; Hansen, M. E.; Mallick, S.; Ranciaro, A.; Hirbo, J.; Thompson, S.; Beggs, W.; Nyambo, T.; Omar, S. A.; Meskel, D. W.; Belay, G.; Froment, A.; Patterson, N.; Reich, D.; Tishkoff, S. A. (2019). "African evolutionary history inferred from whole genome sequence data of 44 indigenous African populations, Table 1". Genome Biology. 20 (1): 82. doi:10.1186/s13059-019-1679-2. PMC 6485071. PMID 31023338.
- ^ Choudhury, Ananyo; Aron, Shaun; Sengupta, Dhriti; Hazelhurst, Scott; Ramsay, Michèle (1 August 2018). "African genetic diversity provides novel insights into evolutionary history and local adaptations". Human Molecular Genetics. 27 (R2): R209–R218. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddy161. ISSN 0964-6906. PMC 6061870. PMID 29741686.
- ^ Lewin, Roger (18 February 2009). Human Evolution: An Illustrated Introduction. Wiley. p. 69. ISBN 9781405156141.
- ^ Moran, Emilio F. (9 May 2022). Human Adaptability: An Introduction to Ecological Anthropology. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000565935.
- ^ Butt Colson, Audrey (9 September 2021). The Nilotes of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and Uganda. Creative Media Partners, LLC. ISBN 9781013629884.
- ^ Sen, Amartya; Drèze, Jean (17 October 1991). The Political Economy of Hunger: Volume 3: Endemic Hunger. Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780191544484.
- ^ Roberts & Bainbridge 1963, pp. 341–370.
- ^ a b Hiernaux 1975, pp. 142–143 & 147.
- ^ Campbell, Leslie & Campbell 2006, pp. 71–82.
- ^ New Studies In Athletics, vol.2, pp. 15–24.
- ^ Onywera et al. 2006, p. 415.
References
[edit]- Campbell, B.; Leslie, P.; Campbell, K. (2006). "Age-related Changes in Testosterone and SHBG among Turkana Males". American Journal of Human Biology. 18 (1): 71–82. doi:10.1002/ajhb.20468. PMID 16378342. S2CID 23523262.
- Castrì, Loredana; Garagnani, Paolo; Useli, Antonella; Pettener, Davide; Luisell, Donata (2008). "Kenyan crossroads: migration and gene flow in six ethnic groups from Eastern Africa" (PDF). Journal of Anthropological Sciences. 86: 189–92. PMID 19934476.
- Chesaina, C (1991). Oral Literature of the Kalenjin. Heinmann Kenya. p. 29. ISBN 978-996646891-8.
- Clark, J.D.; Brandt, S.A. (1984). From Hunters to Farmers: The Causes and Consequences of Food Production in Africa. University of California Press. p. 234. ISBN 0-520-04574-2.
- Clark, John Desmond (1984). From Hunters to Farmers: The Causes and Consequences of Food Production in Africa. University of California Press. p. 31. ISBN 0-520-04574-2.
- Collins, Robert O. (2006). The Southern Sudan in Historical Perspective. Transaction Publishers. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-141280585-8.
- Cooper, Julien (2017). "Toponymic Strata in Ancient Nubia until the Common Era". Dotawo: A Journal of Nubian Studies. 4: 197–212. doi:10.5070/d64110028.
- Cruciani, Fulvio; La Fratta, Roberta; Santolamazza, Piero; Sellitto, Daniele; et al. (May 2004). "Phylogeographic Analysis of Haplogroup E3b (E-M215) Y Chromosomes Reveals Multiple Migratory Events Within and Out Of Africa". American Journal of Human Genetics. 74 (5): 1014–1022. doi:10.1086/386294. PMC 1181964. PMID 15042509. Archived from the original on 12 January 2013.
- De Vries, Kim (2007). Identity Strategies of the Argo-pastoral Pokot: Analyzing ethnicity and clanship within a spatial framework. Universiteit Van Amsterdam.
- "Dinka". Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East. Vol. 1. Infobase Publishing. 2009.
- Ehret, Christopher (1998). An African Classical Age: Eastern & Southern Africa in World History 1000 B.C. to A.D.400. University Press of Virginia. p. 7. ISBN 0-8139-1814-6.
- Forde, Cyril Daryll; James, Wendy (1999). Forde, Cyril Daryll (ed.). African worlds: studies in the cosmological ideas and social values of African peoples. Classics in African Anthropology. International African Institute (2nd ed.). Hamburg: LIT Verlag. ISBN 0-85255-286-6. OCLC 40683108.
- Gautier, Achilles (2006). "The faunal remains of the Early Neolithic site Kadero, Central Sudan" (PDF). Archaeology of Early Northeastern Africa. Studies in African Archaeology. Vol. 9. Poznan Archaeological Museum. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2020. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
- Gillies, Eva (n.d.). "Azande". UCLA Social Sciences. Retrieved 25 May 2020.[dead link ]
- Gomes, V; Sánchez-Diz, P; Amorim, A; Carracedo, A; Gusmão, L (March 2010). "Digging deeper into East African human Y chromosome lineages". Human Genetics. 127 (5): 603–13. doi:10.1007/s00439-010-0808-5. PMID 20213473. S2CID 23503728.
- Hassan, Hisham Y.; Underhill, Peter A.; Cavalli-Sforza, Luca L.; Muntaser, E. Ibrahim (2008). "Y-Chromosome Variation Among Sudanese: Restricted Gene Flow, Concordance With Language, Geography, and History". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 137 (3): 316–323. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20876. PMID 18618658.
- Henn, Brenna M.; Gignoux, Christopher; Lin, Alice A.; Oefner, Peter J.; et al. (2008). "Y-chromosomal evidence of a pastoralist migration through Tanzania to southern Africa". PNAS. 105 (31): 10693–10698. Bibcode:2008PNAS..10510693H. doi:10.1073/pnas.0801184105. PMC 2504844. PMID 18678889.
- Hiernaux, Jean (1975). The People of Africa. Scribners. pp. 142–143 & 147. ISBN 0-684-14236-8.
- Hollfelder, Nina; Schlebusch, Carina M.; Günther, Torsten; Babiker, Hiba; et al. (2017). "Northeast African genomic variation shaped by the continuity of indigenous groups and Eurasian migrations". PLOS Genetics. 13 (8): e1006976. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1006976. PMC 5587336. PMID 28837655.
- Huntingford, George Wynn Brereton (1953). The Nandi of Kenya: tribal control in a pastoral society. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-203-71516-1. OCLC 610251222.
- Kidd, Colin (2006). The Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600–2000. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521-79729-0.
- Kipkorir, B.E; Welbourn, F.B. (1973). The Marakwet of Kenya: A preliminary study. East Africa Educational Publishers. p. 64.
- Krzyzaniak, Lech (1976). "The Archaeological Site of Kadero, Sudan". Current Anthropology. 17 (4): 762. doi:10.1086/201823. S2CID 144379335.
- Krzyzaniak, Lech (1978). "New Light on Early Food-Production in the Central Sudan". Journal of African History. 19 (2): 159–172. doi:10.1017/S0021853700027572. S2CID 162767986.
- Lienhardt, Godfrey (1988). Divinity and Experience: The Religion of the Dinka. Oxford University Press. ISBN 019823405-8.
- Marshall, Fiona; Hildebrand, Elisabeth (2002). "Cattle Before Crops: The Beginnings of Food Production in Africa". Journal of World Prehistory. 16 (2): 99–143. doi:10.1023/A:1019954903395. S2CID 19466568.
- Mercer, Patricia (1971). "Shilluk Trade and Politics from the Mid-Seventeenth Century to 1861". Journal of African History. 12 (3): 407–426. doi:10.1017/S0021853700010859. JSTOR 181041. S2CID 154445649.
- Metz, Helen Chapin, ed. (1991). "Non-Muslim Peoples". Sudan: A Country Study. Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress.
- "Nilot". Encyclopædia Britannica. 12 October 2024.
- "Nilotic". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing. 2020.
- Oboler, Regina Smith (1985). Women, Power, and Economic Change: The Nandi of Kenya. Stanford University Press. p. 17. ISBN 080471224-7.
- Ogot, B. A., ed. (1999). "Chapter 7: The Sudan, 1500–1800". General History of Africa. Vol. V: Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. pp. 89–103. ISBN 978-0-520-06700-4.
- Ogot, Bethwell A. (1967). History of the Southern Luo: Volume I, Migration and Settlement, 1500–1900. Peoples of East Africa. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.
- Okoth, Assa; Ndaloh, Agumba (2006). Peak Revision K.C.P.E. Social Studies. Nairobi, Kenya: East African Educational Publishers. pp. 60–62. ISBN 978-9966-25-450-4.
- Onywera, Vincent O.; Scott, Robert A.; Boit, Michael K.; Pitsiladis, Yannis P. (April 2006). "Demographic characteristics of elite Kenyan endurance runners" (PDF). Journal of Sports Sciences. 24 (4): 415–422. doi:10.1080/02640410500189033. PMID 16492605. S2CID 16303504. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
- Rilly, Claude (2016). "The Wadi Howar Diaspora and its role in the spread of East Sudanic languages from the fourth to the first millennia BCE". Faits de Langues. 47 (1): 151–163. doi:10.1163/19589514-047-01-900000010. S2CID 134352296.
- Roberts, D. F.; Bainbridge, D. R. (1963). "Nilotic physique". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 21 (3): 341–370. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330210309. PMID 14159970.
- Robertshaw, Peter (1987). "Prehistory in the Upper Nile Basin". Journal of African History. 28 (2): 177–189. doi:10.1017/S002185370002973X. S2CID 161548406.
- Saltin, Bengt. "The Kenya project – Final report". New Studies In Athletics. Vol. 2. pp. 15–24.
- "Shilluk". Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East. Vol. 1. Infobase Publishing. 2009.
- Singh, Nagendra K. (2002). International Encyclopaedia of Islamic Dynasties. Anmol Publications. p. 659. ISBN 978-812610403-1.
- "South Sudan horror at deadly cattle vendetta". BBC News. 12 January 2012.
- Tishkoff, Sarah A.; Reed, Floyd A.; Friedlaender, Françoise R.; Ehret, Christopher; et al. (2009). "The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans". Science. 324 (5930): 1035–44. Bibcode:2009Sci...324.1035T. doi:10.1126/science.1172257. PMC 2947357. PMID 19407144.; Also see Supplementary Data
- Wood, Elizabeth T.; Stover, Daryn A.; Ehret, Christopher; Destro-Bisol, Giovanni; Spedini, Gabriella (2005). "Contrasting patterns of Y chromosome and mtDNA variation in Africa: evidence for sex-biased demographic processes". European Journal of Human Genetics. 13 (7): 867–876. doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201408. PMID 15856073.(cf. Appendix A: Y Chromosome Haplotype Frequencies)
Further reading
[edit]- Reich, David (27 March 2018). Who We Are and How We Got Here: Ancient DNA and the New Science of the Human Past. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-110187032-7.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Nilotic peoples at Wikimedia Commons